CMN201 – Task 2 Essay
ESSAY QUESTIONS
Write a 1200 word argumentative essay on ONE of the following questions. The essay must be grounded in relevant academic and industry research with a minimum of SIX academic sources included. You should use the Harvard referencing system to cite your research. Approaches to the essay will be discussed further in tutorials.(Academic style)
What | What is in it? | Word count/notes |
Intro |
· Intro sentence – introduce the topic
· Roadmap of your essay · Thesis statement |
120 words |
Body | Each paragraph should have:
1. topic sentence 2. evidence (academic source and maybe a media source) 3. example (cite a media source if relevant) 4. your analysis to contribute to argument 5. summary sentence or linking to next paragraph sentence |
Notes:
Never ever have a paragraph that is less than 4 sentences.
Do NOT float your quotes.
Try to paraphrase. |
Para 1 | Key point of the paragraph:
|
150 |
Para 2 | Key point of the paragraph:
|
150 |
Para 3 | Key point of the paragraph:
|
150 |
Para 4 | Key point of the paragraph:
|
150 |
Para 5 | Key point of the paragraph:
|
150 |
Para 6 | Key point of the paragraph | 150 |
Conclusion | · Sum up main points
· Restate thesis · Closing statement |
120
|
CMN201: CHILDREN, MEDIA AND SOCIETY
RECOMMENDED READING LIST*
*Please note that the sources marked as ‘online’ are available electronically via the USC library website. All other sources have been placed on short term loan.
Aisbett, K 2000, 20 years of C: children’s television programs and regulation 1979-1999, ABA, Sydney.
Banet-Weiser, S 2007, Kids rule!: Nickelodeon and consumer citizenship, Duke UP, Durham. [online]
Barr, T 2000, Newmedia.com.au: the changing face of Australia’s media and communications, Allen & Unwin, St Leonards, NSW. [online]
Bielby, DD and Harrington, CL 2008, Global TV: exporting TV and culture in the world market, New York UP, New York. [online]
Brooks, K 2008, Consuming innocence: popular culture and our children, UQP, St Lucia, Qld.
Bryant, JA (ed.) 2007, The children’s television community, Lawrence Erlbaum, New Jersey. [online]
Bryman, A 2004, The Disneyization of society, Sage, London. [online]
Buckingham, D 2000, After the death of childhood: growing up in the age of electronic media, Polity Press, Cambridge. [online]
Buckingham, D (ed.) 2002, Small screens: television for children, Leicester UP, Leicester. [online]
Buckingham, D 2011, The material child: growing up in consumer culture, Polity, Cambridge.
Buckingham D & Willett R (eds) 2013, Digital generations: children, young people, and new media, Routledge, London. [online]
De Block, L & Buckingham, D 2010, Global children, global media: migration, media and childhood, Palgrave Macmillan, New York.
Giroux, HA 2010, The mouse that roared: Disney and the end of innocence, 2nd edn, Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham. [online]
Hammer, F 2013, Public service media in the digital age: international perspectives, Cambridge Scholars, Newcastle upon Tyne. [online]
Herd, N 2012, Networking: commercial television in Australia: a history, Currency House, Strawberry Hills, NSW.
Heywood, C 2002, A history of childhood: children and childhood in the west from medieval to modern times, Polity Press, Cambridge.
Howe, AN & Yarbrough, W 2014, Kidding around: the child in film and media, Bloomsbury, London. [online]
Kirsh, SJ 2012, Children, adolescents, and media violence: a critical look at the research,2nd edn, Sage, London.
Lemish, D 2007, Children and television: a global perspective, Blackwell, Oxford, UK.
Lemish, D 2010, Screening gender on children’s television: the view of producers around the world, Routlege, London.
Lemish, D 2013, The Routledge international handbook of children, adolescents and media, Routledge, London.
Lemish, D 2014, Children and media: a global perspective, Wiley, New York. [online]
Lumby C & Fine, D 2006, Why TV is good for kids: raising 21st century children, MacMillan, Sydney.
Marsh, J 2005, Popular culture, new media and digital literacy in early childhood, Routledge, London.
McDonald, K and Smith-Rowsey, D (eds) 2016, The Netflix effect: technology and entertainment in the 21st century, NY Bloomsbury Academic, New York.